I would like to share a suggestion for improving your service to the Jewish Community. I am sure you are familiar with the Jewish laws pertaining to a Kohen’s coming in contact with or being in the same room as a corpse. Currently, a Kohen who attends services at your chapel and wants to properly observe the laws of ritual purity does not have any suitable facility for sitting and shelter from the elements. I recently found out about a chapel in Harrisburg, PA called Kesher Israel Congregation which does offer those accommodations to Kohanim. Surely if Harrisburg, PA can accommodate Kohanim in a respectful manner, then all the more so a larger, growing city like Cleveland.

By providing appropriate facilities for a Kohen you will be serving mourners at many funerals and perhaps educating many who may be a Kohen and aren’t familiar with the laws of ritual purity. I would appreciate your consideration of this matter.

Many drivers in our community seem to be unaware of one of the rules of the road: The driver that is on the clear side of a road, meaning, where there are no parked cars, has the right of way on a two-lane road. This includes nearly all of the residential roads in the area. Thus, if you are driving on the side where cars are parked, and there is an oncoming vehicle, regardless of whether you think you both fit next to the parked car, you are required by law to stop behind the parked car in your path, and wait until the oncoming vehicle passes.

I am writing in support of the Ohio Issue 1 that is on the ballot this year. If you have not yet voted, I encourage you to read this so that you can make an informed decision about how you would like to vote.

Ohio is at the center of the national drug addiction crisis. This crisis is everywhere and affects every community, even our own. When you reach the levels of addiction and overdose deaths that Ohio has, you start to realize that the face of an addict is not what you might picture. There are addicts of every gender, age, color, religion, marital status, socioeconomic status, and level of observance. Every type of person is susceptible to this. But especially young people, precious teenagers who have full lives ahead of them.

The goal of Ohio issue 1 is to provide more non-prison support systems so that those inflicted with addiction can separate themselves from their addiction, recover, and move on with their lives. Doctors, nurses and many people who work in law enforcement support Issue 1 because it will reduce the number of drug users who go to prison and funnel resources to recovery services. Healthcare professionals agree that prisons do not solve addiction and that more resources are needed to provide services that help end the horrible crisis we are in.

There is also a dollars and cents logic here as well. Financially, it is incredibly taxing on law enforcement agencies and prisons to deal with drug addiction, especially because they are not trained to do so. Issue 1 would help put dollars where they are most impactful – into recovery resources.

Lastly, there is no current solution to this crisis. If you are worried about drug addicts on the streets, THEY ALREADY ARE. That is the crisis! This effort would help provide resources for them to get better, not be housed in a prison, a hotbed of criminal activity, which will often do more harm than good.

I’m happy to provide resources on Issue 1 to anyone who is seeking to learn more. It has been heavily vetted by non-political actors and I can send reports and testimonials to people upon request.

All politics are local is as true now as ever. Important elections coming up this November and you must be registered to vote. Remember if you don’t vote, you can’t be counted, and if you don’t count, we all count for less. Stand up for your community and do your civic duty also considered a Mitzva to do so. To vote in the next election, you must be registered 30 days before. There are local and state issues that effect us coming up on this November’s ballot.

Do You Need to Register?

Have you recently moved?

Has someone in your home recently turned 18 or will be 18 by November?

If you’ve never registered at your new address or will be newly eligible to vote or have never voted before, it’s easy to register by filling out the form at Cuyahoga County Board of Elections website (or Lake County’s) or at any DMV or Library. Please do so today because if you don’t vote, you don’t count.

While walking in my neighborhood a few days ago, I observed a driver davening—not by heart, but actually reading from a siddur while the car was in motion. There is nothing commendable about this person’s devotion to Torah u’mitzvos, when s/he does not have love for the children of HaKadosh Baruch Hu.

We just read last week about the arei miklat—the cities of refuge to which an inadvertent killer could flee. Remember that this person was exiled, could not return home for the whole tenure of the Kohen Gadol, because, although the killing was not intentional, he is, nonetheless, guilty of criminal negligence. How would the driver feel if, chas vechalilah, he struck a person and caused serious injury, or worse?

Achai Bnei Yisrael, remember that driving is a privilege, not a right. You are operating heavy, dangerous machinery when you drive a vehicle, thus the warnings on pharmaceuticals that make one slow to respond.

Do your davening in shul or at home, and then drive to your destination. If you are running late, then go to work or your appointment, and daven during your break, in a room where you can stand on your feet.

With wishes for a meaningful fast, and may this year be the one in which the day is changed me’evel leYom Tov.

All politics are local is as true now as ever. Important elections coming up this November and you must be registered to vote. Remember if you don’t vote, you can’t be counted, and if you don’t count, we all count for less. Stand up for your community and do your civic duty also considered a Mitzva to do so. To vote in the next election, you must be registered 30 days before. There are local and state issues that effect us coming up on this November’s ballot.

Do You Need to Register?

Have you recently moved?

Has someone in your home recently turned 18 or will be 18 by November?

If you’ve never registered at your new address or will be newly eligible to vote or have never voted before, it’s easy to register by filling out the form at Cuyahoga County Board of Elections website (or Lake County’s) or at any DMV or Library. Please do so today because if you don’t vote, you don’t count.